Moved by Lord Moylan That the Grand Committee takes note of the
Report from the Built Environment Committee Public Transport in
Towns and Cities (1st Report, HL Paper 89). Lord Moylan (Con) My
Lords, in rising to move this Motion, I start by paying tribute to
my predecessor as chairman of the committee, my noble friend Lady
Neville-Rolfe, who in fact chaired it during almost the entire
period when the evidence was being taken that resulted in this
report. Any...Request free trial
Moved by
That the Grand Committee takes note of the Report from the Built
Environment Committee Public Transport in Towns and Cities (1st
Report, HL Paper 89).
(Con)
My Lords, in rising to move this Motion, I start by paying
tribute to my predecessor as chairman of the committee, my noble
friend Lady Neville-Rolfe, who in fact chaired it during almost
the entire period when the evidence was being taken that resulted
in this report. Any credit due to the chairing skills involved in
producing the report must therefore accrue to her and not me. I
also put on record the committee’s thanks to its specialist
adviser, Dr Simon Blainey, and to its clerk at the time, Dee
Goddard, and her team. Dee left the service of the House shortly
afterwards in order to relocate with her family to Yorkshire. She
and her whole team were wonderful in supporting us as we did our
work. It is also very good to see so many current and former
members of the committee present and participating in this
debate.
I am not proposing in these introductory remarks to give a
comprehensive account of everything the report says, partly
because it would take too long and partly because it would leave
very little for other members of the committee to say, but we
were all agreed on the importance of public transport in our
towns and cities.
The Government gave a pledge when elected to bring public
transport in towns and cities up to the standards in London. We
understand that that is difficult, because London has a large
amount of inherited infrastructure, particularly rail and
underground, and a large concentration of people, but we wanted
in preparing this report to see how the Government were doing.
The brief answer is, not terribly well, but a large amount of
that can, I think, be explained by the effects of the pandemic
and in particular by an understandable fall during it in demand
for public transport services, which has to some extent been
sustained, so that demand now is lower than it was before. It
looks as though that might continue for some time—nobody
knows—but it presents a conundrum and a difficulty for the
Government.
Let me come straight away to my remarks on one of the two topics
I would like to focus on, which is buses. Buses provide
two-thirds of public transport trips throughout the country and
are vital in all our towns and cities. We know that passenger
numbers grow if bus operators offer what is referred to in the
business as a turn-up-and-go service: that is, a service of
sufficient frequency—of about 10-minute intervals—so that
passengers do not have to consult a timetable before they leave
home or decide to catch a bus, and are confident that if they
turn up at any particular time, they will not have to wait too
long. After all, a 10-minute interval means an average wait of
five minutes for anyone who is regularly using a service. A
turn-up-and-go service therefore attracts passengers. However,
the effect of falling passenger demand has in fact been a
reduction in services.
I want to congratulate the Government on maintaining the support
for the bus network that they provided during the pandemic and
have continued to provide at a certain level since. We predicted
that if that support did not continue beyond the end of this
March—which, at the time of writing the report, is when it was
due to end—there would be a 20% fall in bus passenger services.
The Government continued their funding and that 20% fall has not
occurred, but even so, newspaper reports tell us that there has
been a 10% fall, and that is probably, in a sense, the new
normal.
As a country, we deserve to have a serious discussion about
buses. Here, I refer with some admiration to Ken Livingstone when
he was Mayor of London, because he illustrates an approach that
worked. Until the point when he became mayor, bus services had
been in a state of decline in London; demand had been falling and
services were not reliable. He succeeded in ramping up provision
so that most buses were operating on a turn-up-and-go service.
Demand rocketed and has been sustained at that level, although
not recently during the pandemic. However, it came with a serious
cost because the subsidy—that is, the difference between the fare
income and the cost of operating the service—grew substantially.
In his time, it was well on the way to £0.5 billion a year and is
now considerably in excess of that. In large part, that was to do
with the fact that the fares were set lower than was necessary.
So in my view there is a trade-off between providing the sort of
service that attracts passengers and a willingness to set fares
at a rate that makes the subsidy manageable financially, which is
obviously a consideration for the Government.
There is also the very sensitive subject of concessions. In
London, approximately 40% of passengers were not paying a fare.
There are, of course, statutory concessions for bus
passengers—the Freedom Pass in London and the national bus pass
scheme—but they are targeted largely at elderly people. A large
number of voluntary and discretionary concessions have been
granted that could be removed without amending the statute. At
some point it is worth having a serious debate about how we are
going to respond to the fall in demand, and perhaps today is the
time to kick it off. Is it by cutting services, which in my view
leads to a spiral of decline, or by ramping up services but
controlling the subsidy, as I am calling it, through a
combination of fares and more limited concessions? These are hard
topics to face, but they are serious ones if we are going to look
forward and discuss public transport, and buses in particular, in
towns and cities in the coming decade.
The second subject that I want to concentrate on—the restrictions
being imposed on the use of private motor vehicles in towns and
cities—led the committee down some paths of inquiry it had not
particularly expected to follow. While passenger demand for
public transport has fallen, demand from local authorities for
new public transport infrastructure has been rising. To some
extent, this has been encouraged by the Government making funding
available. I will step out of my main stream of thought for a
moment to say that one of the issues the committee raised was
whether the funding system is fit for purpose: in other words,
whether bidding for government money in a competitive environment
produces the best outcomes. Is it the case—the committee thought
it might be—that bidding processes reward local authorities that
are large and good at bidding, rather than those with a
fundamentally good case for new transport provision? That is a
point on which the Minister may well want to comment.
Where does this demand for new investment and infrastructure come
from? From talking to highways engineers and local councillors in
various places that we visited, it appeared that a lot of it came
from the fact that they had set targets for reducing the number
of vehicle trips in towns and cities and wanted the money not
only to build the public realm in a more pedestrian-friendly
fashion but for the transport infrastructure that would
substitute for people using their cars. A target of 20% or 30% is
found almost universally. When we quizzed the Minister about
this, she said that this was not a government or national target
but entirely a local matter. However, we inquired into why all
the localities tend to come to the same number.
Those of us with experience of local government know that a lot
of policy development takes place on the basis of what academics
in the field are saying and what the professional bodies that
represent that particular branch of local authority officers are
disseminating. We discovered that the academic world was pushing
strongly for this 20% to 30% reduction, partly on the basis of
meeting non-statutory interim targets for net zero and partly on
the basis that, if all vehicles become electric and the pollution
and air quality problems largely dissipate, we will not have
enough electricity to run them. These people have a vision of
towns and cities with much more public transport, much larger
limitations on car use and limitations on car ownership, because
the electricity simply will not be available to run them.
However, there has been no real discussion about this. The
Minister’s point that this was not a national policy, which I
obviously accept in good faith, was controverted for me when my
attention was drawn, only a matter of days ago, to the newly
published Driver and Vehicle Standards Agency (DVSA) Vision to
2030, which is by a national body that reports to the Department
for Transport and thus to my noble friend. On page 11, one sees
that part of its vision for 2030 is for:
“Half of all journeys in towns and cities to be made by walking
or cycling”.
It makes it slightly more difficult for the Government to say
that they do not have a national policy on this if one of their
executive agencies so clearly does. It needs to be flushed out
and discussed. Does it command the support that policymakers
think it might? If it does, why are they so reluctant to discuss
it in public? Some honesty and openness on this would be very
helpful.
I will not go on much longer, except to say that other topics we
discussed included post-project evaluation, which we think needs
to be undertaken much more seriously and in a much more
determined way. This was the subject in our reply from the
Minister on which we detected the most stickiness and
defensiveness from the department. It is really not very keen on
post-project evaluation, but we will continue to press on
that.
Finally, we had a number of recommendations that I can summarise
as “How to make public transport more user-friendly”, thinking
about it from the perspective of the passenger. Examples include
ticketing and timetables, better information and more integration
of services, which we think the Government need to take in hand.
There is also the issue of our rather fractured local system,
with local authorities being required to adopt an enhanced
partnership or a franchising model with local bus providers,
which can make the situation more difficult. With that, I shall
bring my opening remarks to an end and beg to move.
3.59pm
(Con)
My Lords, I confess to having joined the Built Environment
Committee as this report on public transport was being finalised,
so my input was, at best, minimal.
I am sure that most people in this Moses Room use public
transport at some time. I certainly do while here in London;
however, my experience as a resident of a semi-rural area in
Yorkshire makes me a rather reluctant user of public transport.
My train journey from King’s Cross to Leeds, taking approximately
two hours and 15 minutes, is generally very convenient, but what
most residents in London do not realise is that, for most people
living outside London, getting to and from the start of a journey
is the most inconvenient leg of that journey.
My inconvenient leg probably highlights a number of issues that
this report raises. My nearest station is a good 40-minute walk
away. I can reach a bus stop with reasonable ease, but the buses
do not regularly follow a timetable and there is no real-time
indicator available to let me know how long my wait will be. As I
mentioned, the trains from King’s Cross to Leeds run efficiently
but, on the return leg of my journey, I often reach Leeds at peak
times. All local trains are standing room only, and it is almost
a case of choosing whether there is room on the train for my
luggage to travel or for me to travel. If I return to my local
station late in the evening, I arrive at a very dark, deserted
and unmanned station. It certainly does not feel safe or
comfortable for a woman—or anyone, for that matter—travelling
alone.
All my comments so far may seem very flippant; however, they are
meant to illustrate just how important good transport systems are
in our towns and cities. We all know of the need for a thriving
economy and to encourage more people into employment or to return
to employment. Ease of public transport is an essential element
in this endeavour. Many of our major cities are increasingly
unfriendly to cars—if anyone has tried to drive in the centre of
Leeds lately, they will know exactly what I mean. These hugely
important travel-to-work areas no longer make much provision for
car use, so public transport has to be a satisfactory
alternative. As said in the Town Planning
Review as long ago as 1958, transport can be the
“maker and breaker of cities”.
Decarbonising the economy to reach net zero by 2050, adapting to
the impact of a changing climate and achieving the 2030
sustainable development goals are, we are told, all crucial to
the UK’s future economic and social prosperity. The public
transport which helps to address these issues is a vital
contributor to our future well-being.
Having spent 30 years representing five rural villages—some on
remote moorland—on Bradford Metropolitan Council, I have concerns
about appropriate public transport accessibility for such areas.
I helped to instigate a “wheels to work” scheme for young people
unable to reach FE colleges, apprenticeships and work because of
the lack of appropriate public transport. The recommendation for
local transport authorities to adopt either an enhanced
partnership or a plan to establish a franchising scheme should
contribute to alleviating this kind of problem. Also, the
demand-responsive transport—DRT—trials taking place may show that
this could also be of benefit in remote areas that are difficult
to access. The BusMan Transport Consultancy has said:
“DRT has the potential to enable a public transport service to be
provided in a sustainable way in small and medium-sized towns at
times of lower demand”.
According to Transport Focus, a more open-data environment is
needed to meet customer expectations. There is a role here for
local authorities in managing data. Local and regional
authorities can act as neutral protectors of sensitive data
provided by operators. This will enable public authorities to
ensure that appropriate data is available to planners of public
transport services.
By 2050, one in four people will be over 65 and an ageing
population will have an impact on the design and accessibility of
public transport. Public transport will be key to the well-being
of the elderly; without a reliable and suitable service, many
elderly people could suffer from loneliness and isolation.
Improving the safety of stations, bus stops and transport
interchanges by ensuring that they are clean and well lit should
be a priority for local and national government. Fear of unsafe
places can deter the elderly and all vulnerable people from using
public transport.
Local transport authorities have been expected to produce local
transport plans every five years. In 2008, that requirement was
removed, and 61% of authorities have not updated their plans
since 2011. Those plans are clearly out of date and in many cases
of no value. If new developments are to encourage public
transport use, effective integration of land use and transport
planning will be key. To help integrate transport and planning,
the Government should link the production of local transport
plans and local plans. Can my noble friend tell us whether that
would be possible and whether there are plans for it to
happen?
The report says:
“Public transport investment and objectives should focus on the
factors which are most important to users: convenience,
reliability, fares, punctuality, safety and frequency.”
If all the recommendations in the report were met, we would
certainly have a world-class transport system.
4.06pm
(Lab)
My Lords, it is a great pleasure to follow the noble Baroness and
speak in this debate. I thank the noble Baroness, Lady
Neville-Rolfe, for starting it off and the noble Lord, , for finishing the report as
chair. We also need to thank all those who gave evidence, written
and oral. They were very interesting, long and useful pieces of
evidence, which helped us come up with an extremely useful
report—although I suppose that I would say that, would I not?
Let us be clear that public transport enables people to move
around easily, quickly, safely and cheaply. It covers a whole age
range—old and young, those going to school and college, as well
as those with jobs and families. It affects everybody. How do we
achieve that? The report speaks about the need for integration of
modes and road space, which covers cars, deliveries,
rail—suburban rail, anyway—buses and other means, such as
scooters and things, which I shall come back to. But they need
integrating in a way that includes allocation of space, costs and
safety. I shall not say much about buses, because the noble Lord,
, spoke about them, and I spoke
about them in a debate just before the recess.
On space on streets, I spent a day in Paris last week cycling on
a green hire bike and I was amazed by the changes in that capital
city over the past few years. Many noble Lords have probably been
there in times past and know that trying to drive through Paris
was a bit of a challenge, frankly. You never knew where you were
going, who was going to hit you, who you were going to run over
and everything else. It has changed completely. They have banned
most scooters, which some people think is a good thing. There
were too many before. But what I found so interesting was that
van and car drivers gave way to pedestrians and cyclists without
any hassle at all, and they all obeyed the traffic lights—which,
again, does not always happen. The Parisian authorities have
managed to educate mainly their drivers but scooter and cycle
riders too, as well as pedestrians, to behave and work
together.
I hope we could do this in future. I am sure that when she
responds, the Minister will tell us that the legislation on
electric scooters is imminent—even if she does not, I hope it is.
As part of the legislation, I am convinced that there needs to be
education here, not just in London but in many other cities, for
cyclists, pedestrians and scooter drivers so that they all work
together. It does not make much difference to the end result—you
are still going to get there on time—but you will not have the
hassle that we get at the moment.
There are examples in other cities as well, but the other issue
is the cost of public transport, which the noble Lord, , also mentioned. We have seen
evidence of what is happening in Germany, with very low-fare
season tickets, and just last week, another batch of season
tickets covering regional trains and buses was announced. Austria
and Switzerland have done the same. Apart from the benefits of
simplicity and flexibility, there is the benefit of cost.
We have to understand that getting around the city—or villages,
for that matter—is an essential part of life. Having buses
cancelled outside London is really serious for people. We must
recognise that many of us, as politicians, rightly set out our
experience of travel, but many people cannot do what we do
because they cannot afford it. They cannot afford a car or to get
there by other means. Apart from the issues of poverty and
shopping, there is getting a job. We need some regulation in the
bus sector to support the continuation of the whole system, as
noble Lords have mentioned, rather like we have on the railways.
As the noble Lord, , said, many more people use
buses than use railways, but we do not get the same policy input
into them that we should.
Sadly, a vociferous minority of politicians and business leaders
like to use their own motor transport to get around, and they
would rather have extra road space for them, with the effects on
charges, safety and pollution, than succumb more to what happened
during the Covid restrictions, which I thought was a really good
change to the use of road space.
I hope we can get back to a situation, that probably existed in
some of our lifetimes, whereby many people cycled long distances
to work because it was the only way to do it and it was cheap.
Now, you would probably get run over before you got back after
your first day at work.
I am very pleased to have been part of this report. We have said
some good and useful things but it is only a start. In future, I
would like discussion about scooters, bikes and walking—active
travel, as we call it—and the changes that will happen to freight
distribution in cities and elsewhere. We need to look at what
happens in the countryside, because if people cannot get around,
there are no buses and they are imprisoned in their own home,
that is just as bad as anything else.
I think the committee—it is not for me to decide, but I shall
make my arguments—has a long way to go, but we have started. This
will be a very interesting debate and I look forward to the
Minister’s response.
4.14pm
(LD)
My Lords, I congratulate the noble Lord, , and the committee on their
excellent report. The noble Lord’s emphasis on the importance of
the bus and the level of fares charged, and the difficulties
caused by the bidding process for investment, all struck me as
extremely important.
Noble Lords will be aware that I was not a member of the
committee, but I have a keen interest in public transport issues
and serve as vice-chair of the city regions transport APPG. As I
said, this report is excellent. It identifies a range of very
important issues that need resolution, such as block grants, the
need for the infrastructure levy to support affordable housing,
the importance of franchising, the importance of young people
under the age of 40 to ridership and fare income, the need for
better understanding of user priorities, and—as the noble Lord,
, mentioned—the turn-up-and-go
principle, which is absolutely critical to the success of public
transport services. There is also a need for co-ordinated
timetabling between different modes of travel.
It is good that the Government agree with many of the
recommendations, and I hope the necessary action will be
forthcoming, but complex issues are sometimes dealt with rather
superficially in their response. For example, in paragraph 114,
on integrating transport planning with strategic planning, the
Government are asked to link the production of local transport
plans with local plans. The committee is absolutely right to
recommend this. I went to my files and found the strategic
transport plan produced four years ago by Transport for the
North, but which is still current. The paragraph headed “Spatial
planning” states that Transport for the North
“wants to build a collaborative and constructive
relationship”
with the 72 planning authorities across the north to
“ensure that the right sustainable developments, spaces and
places are unlocked and delivered across the North…to support
Local Planning Authorities as they develop their local plans and
strategies.”
The report goes on to say:
“The principle of joined-up planning for new homes and
infrastructure has long been acknowledged at a national level and
is mentioned as a key element of the Government’s Industrial
Strategy”.
That was four years ago but the basic principles still apply, and
it is absolutely fundamental. It is not enough for the Government
simply to note the recommendation, as opposed to actively trying
to do something about it.
The problem is that post-war planning policies—so over 60 years
old—have encouraged out of town development, often aided by grant
regimes to recover old industrial or brownfield land. It was
understandable and was right at the time; however, journeys have
become dependent on the availability of a car. Once purchased, it
is often cheaper for a household to use that car than to take
public transport. As the noble Baroness, Lady Eaton, pointed out
a moment ago, it can also often be faster. Shopping malls, retail
parks and business parks, some very substantial, have led
directly to increased car use. Journeys have become more
complicated for individuals, particularly those going to work,
who measure cost and time in reaching a decision as to what form
of transport to use. Things were much simpler when most jobs were
in city and town centres, but that is less the case now. We need
to reverse the trend, hence the importance of integrating local
transport planning with local plans. So, paragraph 114, which
recommends joining them together, is central to the Government
achieving some of the objectives the report has set.
The report tells us that 68% of commuter journeys were by car in
2019. This is not a surprise, given the nature of the journeys a
lot of people have to make. The report also tells us that the
Government would like to reduce car journeys by 30%. This will
not happen unless money is forthcoming to invest in better public
transport services, and more journeys go to town and city
centres. That takes me to London.
The levelling-up White Paper promised London-style public
transport, saying its ambition was for areas outside London to
have services
“significantly closer to the standards of London”.
This will involve money, and it will require much greater local
control through regulation. The committee report says that London
has a £73 per capita subsidy for bus services, whereas the rest
of England has only £27. I do not know whether these figures
include the cost of concessionary travel, which accounts for
one-third of all passenger journeys—the noble Lord, , pointed out that it is 40% in
London—but in practice, concessionary travel is a very important
subsidy to keep buses on the roads across the country providing a
service.
Whatever the facts are, more fare income needs to be generated
and, as a start, it is key that transport planning is not
disconnected from new housing development. As the report
says,
“transport can be an afterthought”,
when it needs to be a central part of the planning process.
Finally, paragraph 138 states:
“An uncoordinated approach to public transport policymaking in
Whitehall has left local areas with often irreconcilable
targets”.
It would be so much better if local transport planning was
devolved, with a block grant system, rather than being
micromanaged out of Whitehall. That is the way to co-ordinated
timetabling and putting users first. The noble Lord, , referred to “hard topics” for
debate, and I hope that the Government will engage with that.
4.21pm
(CB)
My Lords, as a member of the Built Environment Committee, I pay
tribute to our clerks; to our previous chair, the noble Baroness,
Lady Neville-Rolfe, for her leadership; and to the current chair,
the noble Lord, , for his stimulating overview
of our report today. Like so many Select Committee outputs from
your Lordships’ House, this report presents a cross-party,
balanced, evidence-based case for sensible changes to current
government policy.
I draw attention to the last of our committee’s five key
recommendations. The noble Lord, , also drew attention to it. We
recommended that the Government should formally link local
transport plans with local authorities’ local plans covering new
development across their areas. The committee found that
transport planning and local planning were seldom sufficiently
integrated, and, for example, homes were frequently being built
without access to public transport.
In contrast to many other countries, our planning system does not
have an objective of ensuring that additional housing is produced
where the density of population will make public transport
systems more viable. By opting for out-of-town new estates of
low-rise houses—even if they are closely packed together—typical
new developments in the UK create poorly served settlements which
depend on private cars for journeys to work, school, shops and
facilities. The Centre for Cities cited the comparison between
Leeds and Marseille, which
“have a similar population, but 87 per cent of people can reach
the centre of Marseille in 30 minutes by public transport,
compared with 38 per cent in Leeds”—
well under half the amount in Marseille.
A 2018 report by Transport for New Homes reviewed 20 urban
extensions and found that few were being built with links to
public transport. As the Oxford University Commission on Creating
Healthy Cities, which I was pleased to chair, noted in 2022:
“Local Planning Authorities have a key role in resisting
applications for new developments on suburban greenfield sites
that depend upon every house-hold owning at least one car”.
In the Built Environment Committee’s earlier report on meeting
housing demand, we noted the opportunities to undertake major
residential developments on land around railway stations,
creating connections to city centres. It is obviously vastly
better for the environment, and for meeting targets for net-zero
carbon emissions, to plan for new housing estates to be linked by
decent, regular bus services to the neighbouring towns and cities
that provide facilities, shops and employment. Reliance on
private cars takes us in the wrong direction for meeting climate
change imperatives.
The West of England Combined Authority published a strategy last
month stating that car use in the region needs to reduce by 40%—a
huge drop—if net zero climate targets are to be met by 2030.
Congested roads with their pollution from traffic are not only
bad for the planet and for health and well-being but a waste of
time and energy for commuters, contributing to poor
productivity.
Car-dependent new housing estates also prohibit the creation of
intergenerational communities. Older people who cannot or do not
want to drive cannot live alongside younger households because
there is no easy access to amenities—the GP’s surgery, pubs,
parks, et cetera. The master planning of each development can
make a difference too. For example, Derwenthorpe, on the east
side of York, comprises 550 new homes, which are knitted into the
fabric of the city through both active travel—an excellent
Sustrans cycle lane—and public transport. The developer, the
Joseph Rowntree Housing Trust, has worked with the local bus
company to bring a regular service through the new estate to the
city centre and to encourage the habit of using public transport
and taking the bus. A free bus pass for one year has been offered
to new residents and around one in 10 has made full use of this
facility.
My favourite takeaway from this excellent committee report,
therefore, is its conclusion that councils’ local plans—“local
development plans” in the terms of the Levelling-up and
Regeneration Bill—need to be formulated side by side with local
transport plans. The Government responded to this recommendation
by telling us that the Department for Transport is consulting on
guidance setting out how transport authorities should engage
proactively and positively with local planning authorities. Will
the Minister update us on progress with this guidance?
New homes will be in the wrong places if public transport
accessibility is overlooked and transport plans will miss
opportunities for viable services if new housing developments are
ignored. Bringing the two together will make for the healthy,
environmentally friendly, age-friendly, productive and inclusive
communities we all need. I commend the report.
4.27pm
of Fulham (Con)
My Lords, I am very grateful for the opportunity to speak on this
excellent report. I am very pleased to follow my friend, the
noble Lord, , because he said all the things I
would like to have said about the clerks, the support that we got
in producing this report and the excellent work that our previous
chairman, my noble friend Lady Neville-Rolfe, did. I also commend
my noble friend for an excellent introduction
of the report. He covered many of the topics that we highlighted
and emphasised what the Government need to take out of our
report.
I want to concentrate on one aspect which my noble friend touched on, which is buses.
Buses are a critical part of transport, particularly in rural
areas feeding into towns. Trains and trams are very important,
but they cannot get passengers without buses to feed people on to
them. As my noble friend said in the phrase “turn up and go”, for
buses to work they have to be reliable and predictable. Buses
also have to be safe and affordable. It probably goes without
saying that there are two ways of funding buses: one is subsidy
and the other is fares. It is a movable feast depending on
passengers’ use of buses. In other words, the load on the buses
will determine how much subsidy is required.
Looking at reliability is critical for buses. The purpose of
encouraging buses is to get people not to use their motor car. If
you are going to get people not to use their motor car, they must
have certainty that a bus will turn up when they get to the bus
stop and certainty that it will get them to the end of their
journey at a predictable time. This is a very serious problem
with buses and for a lot of transport generally that uses roads.
One thing that our report showed up was a big issue about space
allocation on roads. For instance, we took some evidence from the
Oxford Bus Company, which said that, because of the aggressive
introduction of cycle lanes, buses are forced to go into the
general traffic, with passenger cars and commercial vehicles,
with great consequential delays to the bus service. It is
important that we have a debate and that the Government look
seriously at the allocation of road space for things such as
cycle lanes, which may be virtuous in themselves but cause
knock-on effects deleterious to the wider good for public
transport. If cycle lanes are put in the wrong place and take up
too much road space, they can cause very serious problems.
The other aspect I wanted to touch on is safety, which is a very
difficult problem. One reason that people do not use buses,
particularly late at night, is a fear that the buses will not be
a welcoming environment and may well be positively hostile. It is
not a question of whether the statistics of the number of attacks
on buses is small, as indeed it is; it is a question of whether
people fear that they may be subject to an attack. It can be
about the perception of the difficulties of riding in a bus
safely. That is particularly a problem for female passengers
travelling on buses late at night. It encourages car and taxi use
and prevents people using buses and, indeed, trains. We need to
find a solution to that.
One solution, obviously, would be to reintroduce conductors to
buses, which would be massively expensive. Another solution is to
stop putting the drivers into protected cabins at the front of
buses, where they are protected from being robbed or attacked but
are then unable to protect the other passengers on the bus. It is
a very difficult problem but it must be overcome—and overcome in
a way that gets the confidence of potential bus users.
I think our report is very good and we have highlighted a lot of
problems. One thing we have identified is that, if we are to sort
out the public transport problems in towns and cities, it will be
extremely complex and no single solution will be appropriate for
the whole country. I support my noble friend Lady Eaton and the
noble Lord, , in saying that these
decisions must be taken on a local basis, and we must trust local
authorities to co-ordinate transport and make sure that it is
appropriate to their local needs.
4.34pm
(Lab)
My Lords, I declare my railway interests that are relevant to
this debate: I chair the Great Western Railway stakeholder
advisory board and the North Cotswold Line Task Force, and I am
president of the Cotswold Line Promotion Group. I am a new member
of the Built Environment Committee, so did not take part in the
inquiry whose report was published in November. I congratulate
the committee on its excellent report and its new chair, the
noble Lord, , on introducing this debate so
eloquently.
I support the report’s conclusions and recommendations,
particularly those relating to bus services, which are of such
importance to those in rural areas with no or limited access to
private cars. I also support the call made in paragraph 132 for a
clear statement from the Government on their policy on journeys
made by car. There are many contradictions in national policy
relating to car usage, and I endorse the evidence quoted in
paragraph 128 from the Local Government Association stating
that:
“Government ambitions about increasing public transport use make
little sense when HM Treasury freezes fuel duty every year and
cuts funding to public transport”,
and that from the Martin Higginson Transport Research &
Consultancy, which states:
“A significant barrier is the unwillingness of governments, both
central and local, to commit to policies that constrain car
use”.
The briefing supplied to noble Lords for this debate by the
Institution of Civil Engineers states:
“In the UK, transport is the largest source of greenhouse gas
emissions—27 per cent of the UK’s total in 2019—deriving
primarily from petrol and diesel use in road transport.
Passengers and freight need to switch to lower-carbon transport
modes at an acceptable cost to the taxpayer, meaning the UK’s
public transport networks will need to provide more journeys and
carry more passengers in the future”.
I will concentrate on the North Cotswold Line Task Force. It is a
well-established partnership of five shire counties, under
differing political control and outside any mayoral combined
authority. It brings together planning of housing growth and
transport and has real track records in innovation and investment
in railway services and infrastructure. Worcestershire, which
leads the task force, opened Worcestershire Parkway station in
2020, weeks before the lockdown, having made the case for the
station, sorted out its funding and delivered it on a third-party
basis, working with the rail industry but managing the whole
project itself. Its location as an interchange between the
Birmingham to Bristol and Herefordshire/Worcestershire to
Oxford-Cambridge arc and London lines has proven very popular. It
has attracted the interest of both the Midlands Engine and
Midlands Connect in the North Cotswold Line corridor. Within
three years of opening, despite the lockdown, around 800
passengers are using it every day. The original forecast said
that it would take 10 years to reach those numbers.
The experience of Parkway suggests that we would be unwise to
plan for a permanently depleted market for travel. Leisure travel
on the line is now at higher levels than before Covid. It is a
vivid example of bringing together transport and housing
planning. Some 10,000 new homes are to be built around the
station in the next 20 years—a new garden town of around 25,000
people. Developers recognise how railway connectivity and modern,
accessible stations are really attractive to our growing and
increasingly environmentally aware population.
However, many of the “brick walls” that the committee’s report
highlights still exist, despite achievements such as this. The
task force’s local authorities have put their hands in their own
pockets to develop the case for more frequent services on the
Worcestershire-Oxford-London line to support the delivery of
50,000 homes for more than 120,000 people across the route. To
sustain a higher level of service, as the Minister knows, will
require the restoration of two short lengths of double track.
Ministerial engagement has been positive, we have strong
cross-party support from MPs along the line and we receive
helpful advice from GWR and Network Rail.
The committee’s highlighting of costly competitive bidding is
also a problem understood by task force authorities, which have
committed significantly to levelling up fund and new stations
fund applications. I strongly support the committee’s proposition
for alternative blocks of funding, avoiding the inevitable
wastefulness of public bodies competing for public funding.
What we need is a DfT/Network Rail partnership—or Great British
Railways when it is formally in place—that wants to work with
motivated local authorities which will get on with good projects
themselves if DfT and Network Rail engage closely and offer
positive support to well-constructed cases.
Successful schemes have happened elsewhere with direct DfT
support, such as the splendid Okehampton line in Devon. For the
task force local authorities, much better rail transport is
essential to the sustainability of the sheer scale of housing
growth they need to deliver. They have brought their local plans
and transport thinking together and, as I said, they have
financed and delivered major rail enhancements themselves.
In November 2021, the then Rail Minister, , supported the task
force progressing to the second industry stage—the outline
business case—for its higher frequency service, with the task
force local authorities fully funding and bearing risk on the
scheme. In March 2022, DfT officials said that its team could not
engage further with the task force until the updated rail network
enhancements pipeline was announced. The original pipeline was
first set out in October 2019 but has not been updated since; as
I understand it, there is no planned date for the update,
published in the new year.
We need to move forward now, and as it is some time since we have
had a chance to discuss the project with Ministers, my request to
the noble Baroness this afternoon is to agree to a meeting with
members of the task force board and our Members of
Parliament.
4.41pm
The (CB)
My Lords, it has been my great privilege to serve on the Built
Environment Committee during the period when this subject was
considered. I add my appreciation of and thanks to our former and
present chairman and our erstwhile clerk, Dee Goddard, and for
the briefing that was issued just in the past few days. For those
of us who find their grey matter displaced by the jumble of
things added subsequent to a report such as this, it is very
helpful to have that prompt. Much of the content to which I would
have referred has been covered by others, and I am satisfied that
the relevant material is more than adequately contained within
the report, which I believe speaks for itself.
The report identifies a series of worthy and sometimes
inspirational initiatives, with what I think would be generally
accepted as Transport for London’s example being the gold
standard, but we have been subjected to what might be called
exceptional circumstances. There are not only the normal
constraints—perhaps now the additional constraints—on public
spending but the disruption to and changes in consumer usage
caused by the Covid pandemic, with lasting effects on matters
such as commuting, whether people attend their place of work
full-time or part-time and what that means for land use and the
applicable facilities. I do not forget that this is also
accelerated by squeezed household budgets and the impact of daily
commuting as a net-of-tax cost on people’s income. Nor do I
overlook the fact that commuting travel time is often neither
enjoyable leisure nor gainful work.
We also showed that the command structure is to a degree
fragmented and is not monitoring outcomes adequately. Different
departments operate in different sectors. Decisions may be made
at departmental level, but with the onus for delivery and taking
risk devolved to local government—never mind that it has fewer
resources—and, in turn, to commercial transport providers. There
are gaps in accountability between control of resources,
responsibility for action and the concurrent duty to take action.
Each segment has its own priorities, whether they be political,
public finance, planning, operational risk and so on. The absence
of integration between land use and planning, mentioned by so
many other noble Lords, is extremely concerning, given the
obvious synergies.
I mention just one thing on bus transport in particular. Bus is
one of those things that provides the opportunity to vary it to
an almost infinite degree: it is not set on rails, it is by and
large not attached to cables, and it is capable of adapting, both
by the nature of the vehicle and the frequency and position of
stops, in ways that most other forms of public transport cannot
meet. It should therefore be the initial, and possibly the
interim, mode of choice in changing circumstances, particularly
changing environments, and especially when we are talking about
changes in development patterns within urban areas.
Funding is not always evenly applied or secure over time.
Sometimes, it looks as if there is a poor understanding of likely
outcomes. There is a need for long-term, consistent, durable and
continuous progress towards broadly common goals and an
understanding of what good practice in transport looks like. If
policies are too narrowly focused or shorter term than the time
horizons of the project development and rollout, the result is
dented commitment, lack of trust, user disaffection and,
ultimately, lack of investment necessary to carry it all forward.
I am satisfied that a more holistic approach—if noble Lords will
excuse that overused term—is necessary.
Scheme participation procedures that are overcomplex or require
expensive bidding processes are rightly regarded with suspicion
and deter participants on cost alone. Funding streams that are
proposed but which may be turned off at critical stages are also
unattractive. Scheme architecture combined with responsibility
for the policy, funding, delivery and outcomes—including that
very necessary post-project evaluation—are key to this, along
with slicker ways of ticketing and improvement of the customer
experience. These cannot be left to chance and should not be the
subject of a bewildering array of different local schemes, as if
every city in the land were some sort of foreign jurisdiction, or
indulged in a bidding war for too few resources. For users,
relearning car parking ticket technology or public transport
ticketing for each municipality is a nightmare and should not be
an acceptable outcome in this modern world.
I will leave it there, but it should be said that this is, as the
noble Lord, , said, work in progress. It
has been a privilege to be involved in this matter, but I would
just say that a less defensive and slightly more inclusive
approach to discussions would be helpful, especially in the
knowledge that there may not be one perfect solution to the
matters that we have to deal with.
4.48pm
(Con)
My Lords, I compliment all my colleagues who have contributed,
particularly those who sat on the committee during the
preparation of this report.
The most important recommendation that we put forward—reference
has been made to it already—is in paragraph 116:
“the Government should formally link the production of Local
Transport Plans with Local Plans”.
Yes indeed, I have to say. I have come to believe over the
passage of 60 years that the commission report prepared under the
chairmanship of Sir John Redcliffe-Maud was right. We are
beginning to see the advantages of city regions. If the balance
throughout our country is to be right, we need to have powerful
authorities, whether we achieve them by saying that we are
levelling up or by the twin of that, handing down. They will be
in the best position in planning and construction. They will have
the resources to ensure that they are advised to the highest
level. They can raise standards and ensure the importance of
place, space and design.
These large authorities will have transport issues. We all
understand why the use of cars is to be discouraged, in terms of
health, climate change and, to some extent, congestion, but we
should always remember that the alternative has to be good,
otherwise we are taking away an instrument of freedom of choice
from those many hundreds of thousands of people who say, “Let’s
just get into the car and go out somewhere for a nice day”. If
you take that away, you have to find some alternative way in
which to ensure that they can take advantage of the facilities in
their orbit.
Trains, trams and buses can all play a part in finding the right
mix for getting people from outside cities and towns into them
for marketing or pleasure purposes. The experiment that impressed
me most—and colleagues will know that I spoke about it a great
deal—was what we were shown about very light transport. It is
being developed by Coventry City Council with the help of Warwick
University. It means that the cost of laying track for those
vehicles is slashed to something like £10,000 per kilometre
rather than £50,000. It could be a game-changer.
What I would like to see is the Government of the day talking to
the regions about their ideas. I would like to think that there
would be independent people there, be they top civil servants or
people who have been in the building industry for a long time and
have an objective perspective on these matters, so that the plan,
including transport, can be perfected over a period of time.
There would be a contract, if you like, between the Government of
the day and the authorities concerned, so ideas may be borrowed
from one place’s plan for another. One begins to see how these
things can be done to overcome the worries that we have had about
certain matters.
There are other ingredients to put into the pot, as it were, if
we are to get this right for the future. We have had, since the
report was concluded, the ideas on autonomous cars and how we
will deal with that. There will be air taxis and vertiports,
perhaps mostly for the transfer by drones of minor freight—and
the growth, it seems without correction, of the use of
e-scooters. I really begin to worry when I see reports appear in
the papers of a league table of the number of injuries and deaths
caused by the clash between them and pedestrians. I do not want
to spoil anybody’s pleasure, but we have to watch this particular
development, otherwise we will face considerable risk.
Let us see hope in public transport being developed and taking
people from where they are living in a new development and from
their new homes to where they work. All those things can be dealt
with by public transport, if there is intelligent planning. Let
us call on those who have the skills in planning, construction
and financing major developments and try to ensure that we will
have a better future. We have been grumbling in the committee
about what has happened in the past and worrying about some of
those difficulties that have been aired again today. That is the
pattern that I see—that we really need the big players throughout
the country to level up to the Government and to their neighbours
and so on, so that we have the best and safest transport systems
in the modern world.
4.54pm
(Lab)
My Lords, I happily add my thanks to our two chairs; to our
secretariat, who have been splendid over the period of the
production of this report; and to my colleagues on the committee,
who came from varied backgrounds. What a pleasure it is to follow
the noble Lord, . I never thought that I
would hear the 60 year-old report of Lord Redcliffe-Maud referred
to but, like the noble Lord, , I can remember it. It was
a splendid report.
The possible scope of this report was enormous. It could have
ranged—it has to a degree—from e-scooters to HS2. I will just
concentrate on two things. One is London versus the rest, if I
can put it in those terms, and the other is the variety of
provision in cities of similar size and with similar challenges,
in many respects.
On London versus the rest, the Government kindly referred us to
the significance of this comparison in their response to our
report. They said that, in their levelling-up White Paper,
“the Government set itself the mission of, by 2030, bringing
standards of local public transport connectivity across the
country closer to those of London”.
I give them full marks for ambition, but we need to test how they
cope as they go along. Of course, we all recognise that London
has unique characteristics in the provision of public transport,
the size and reach of the area and so on, but still, these
figures need to be put on the record.
The expenditure-per-head figures for 2019-20 are as follows—they
are pre-pandemic, so perhaps not distorted by some of the
pandemic factors. For London, it was £882 per head. The next
largest region was the south-east, with more than £500 per head.
The lowest was the east Midlands, at £300 per head. The average
for all regions outside London was £489, which means that London
is spending nearly double the amount of any other region in the
country. Work that one out, Sherlock. It is not difficult to
deduce from that that services in London are better than
elsewhere.
What a civic or regional leader would give to have their
expenditure availability for public transport doubled—it would
have something of an impact, however competent or otherwise the
leaders or the regions may be. I simply must ask the Government:
how is their ambition progressing towards the deadline of 2030?
Is it their intention to reduce the disparity on spending per
capita? Do they regard spending per capita as a significant
measure of how well the various regions are doing, or are likely
to be able to do? Are they progressing towards any comparability
at all with London?
The other issue, of the variety of services that apply in cities
outside London, strikes me—I hope I am not the only one—as quite
a significant factor. We know that all cities are different, that
there are big contrasts and so on, but you would expect that
large, urban areas in a fairly small geographic country such as
ours would have some obvious similarities in the way that they
tackle the common problems of urban transport. To give just one
example of the contrasts that exist: Nottingham, Manchester,
Birmingham, Sheffield and a number of others have light rail
systems, yet Leeds, Liverpool and Southampton are among the
largest urban centres in Europe without a light rail system.
There might be good reasons for that, but I am not aware of them,
and I am not quite sure who would be able to tell me.
In our report, we looked at three particular types of urban
transport. We looked at light rail. We looked at very light rail
and, like the noble Lord, , I am very keen to see how
the Coventry experiment develops. It is scheduled to start in
2025, I think, and if it works as a very light rail system—with
the advantages of light rail but without the huge costs of
establishing the system and then maintaining it—it may be a model
that is of value to everyone else. The third system that we
looked at was a bus transit system, which has some of the
advantages of light rail but cannot quite match it in terms of
reliability, predictability and so on.
We made recommendations in our report which flow from this fact
that I have tried to establish about the big variation across the
country. One recommendation was that we should try to eliminate
some of the disadvantages that exist in the funding system at
present; the noble Lord, , dealt with that, so I will
not repeat what has been said. We make the case in our report for
a block grant system, which would make life easier for people
making the applications and make life more predictable for the
local authorities or regional governments that exist. It is
something that the Government should consider.
Perhaps most important in this particular area is that discussion
and evaluation of the schemes that exist is absolutely
fundamental. We are not talking about huge sums of money here,
just the common sense of recognising that there are different
systems in roughly comparable areas but no proper evaluation of
how they are all working. With this, I am in fact suggesting
something to the Minister that does not cost large amounts of
money—though I fear that my suggestion that the regions should do
as well as London would cost large amounts of money. This is why
I would particularly like to hear her response on that point.
5.02pm
(Non-Afl)
My Lords, I welcome this report and agree with the general
premise that public transport plays a vital role in urban
environments, enabling people to access education, leisure,
family and/or work. It is as important for economic productivity
as community dynamism.
The report’s recognition that many British towns outside London
have inadequate, unreliable and expensive transport
infrastructure is of concern, as was acknowledged by the noble
Lord, . The consequences can be dire
when public transport is not adequate to aid essential travel.
Sometimes, alternative support is required. For example, there is
a story from Blackburn, which was raised by MP in the other place, where
parents of 170 SEN pupils have been left in limbo after a
specialist subsidised bus service used by Walton-le-Dale High
School was axed due to a huge unaffordable hike in prices. The
school is out of area but, as Blackburn with Darwen Borough
Council does not have suitable school places for the pupils, the
children are stranded. Normal public transport is neither
suitable nor available, but the council tells them to just get
the bus.
One parent of a son with Asperger’s in year 7 told LancsLive
that:
“Even my son’s paediatrician said that he would not be safe on
public transport”.
Rick Moore, a local politician leading the campaign with the
parents, recently organised for them to address the council.
Tillie, a year 11 pupil, eloquently explained that the walk to
the closest bus stop is on an unlit country lane and that the
pavement is only continuous on one side and has a section of
footpath so narrow that pedestrians are forced on to the road—so
much for safeguarding the young. Sadly, the council remains
indifferent. I raise this to indicate the problems when public
transport is inadequate and also to note that it is not always a
solution to the mobility challenges of living in towns that often
have poorly served rural areas close by.
I turn to another issue. One problem constantly raised in the
report is the steady stream of often contradictory demands on
councils from central government, which confuse transport
priorities. If we look at active travel plans—a euphemistic name
given to non-car mobility for which local authorities receive
substantial funding—these schemes, such as cycling lanes and
walkable neighbourhoods, have nothing to do with public
transport. Worse, however, is that prioritising them can be a
hinderance in terms of allocation of road space, as we have
heard, and can often have the unintended consequence of
increasing congestion.
As James Freeman from BRT UK told the committee:
“At the moment, to favour the cyclist—because that is where the
money and focus are—public buses have found themselves back in
the queue, and the bus service becomes unreliable and slow as a
result”.
As the report rightly notes, bus services are attractive to users
only if they have some priority over the rest of the traffic and
are therefore able to compete with undertaking the journey by
car. Of course, anyone choosing to travel by car is likely to
elicit admonishment, as driving seems to be thoroughly
disapproved of in transport policy circles. I found it
dispiriting that the report fuels this by positing improving
public transport as a way of reducing car use. This is
unnecessarily binary, divisive and unhelpful for citizens. The
Government’s response to the transport decarbonisation plan
states that measures are needed to
“shift to public and active transport”,
and the inquiry reports experts saying that
“a reduction in trips by private car of the order of 30% is
needed to help meet net zero targets.”
I am worried that the language in this debate is misleading, even
disingenuous. This is posed by the DfT as helping to “improve
travel choices”, and local authorities have been given powers to
implement measures to “support improved choices”. TfL says that
the Government have an important role in making public transport,
walking and cycling the mode of choice, but the public are not
being given a choice here. Too often, policies seem coercive and
anti-choice.
One reason why I am opposed to the report’s recommendation that
the Government should set explicit targets for a reduction in car
journeys is that it is bad enough as it is. Some local
authorities have adopted local targets, at the cost of citizens’
freedom to choose to drive. Indeed, many drivers now feel like
they are the villains in an anti-car crusade in urban areas, and
often there is little regard for democratic scrutiny. Look at the
exorbitant emission zone charges, which are widely unpopular.
Noble Lords will have noted the large Together rally in London on
Saturday, against ULEZ. Then there are the infernal low-traffic
neighbourhoods, where roads are blocked off with no discussion
and no mandate. Hackney Council is planning to close 75% of its
road space to cars. Bath’s first LTN, in Southlands, has proven
highly controversial but the council has just announced 48 more
LTNs, and despite lively opposition from Bath’s grass-roots “save
our city” campaign there will also be a £10 million emissions
zone, dubbed a ring of steel by locals. All over the country,
families can no longer drive to their weekly shop, taxi routes
are lengthened and more costly for the disabled and the elderly
getting to GPs, and care workers and plumbers alike are unable to
navigate speedy routes to their next appointment. It is not so
much active travel, as anti-travel.
On the committee’s visit to Birmingham, we were told that meeting
the region’s 2041 decarbonisation target would require a 35%
reduction in car travel over the next 10 years, a 50% reduction
in all trips and an 800% increase in wheeling journeys on
vehicles such as bikes and scooters; that will be great for the
elderly. In that context, there would be a need for a 100%
increase in public transport—as though improving public transport
is just a means to an anti-car end. Worse, drivers end up getting
the blame for problems with public transport. Transport for West
Midlands complains that a “preference towards” driving is
perhaps
“the ‘biggest barrier to improving public transport’”.
Surveys in the region show why people drive: 87% say that their
lifestyle requires that they own a car or a van, and 94% say they
enjoy the independence which car ownership gives them. That word,
“independence”, is key. What is fascinating is that ever since
the anti-car policy wonks grabbed the political steering wheel
back in the late 1990s, and despite the exponential growth in the
car-reduction industry ever since, the number of cars on the road
rose substantially between the 1990s and 2020. As the director of
the future cities project says:
“What this predominantly shows … is that personal mobility
remains important to the public, despite all the policies that
are so hostile to driving”,
and that it is a form of liberation especially espoused by
women.
I urge the Minister not to succumb to pressure to make anti-car
measures more explicit, but rather to concentrate on the worthy
and vigorously pursued goal of improving public transport on its
own terms.
5.09pm
Baroness Taylor of Stevenage (Lab)
My Lords, I too thank the noble Lord, , his predecessor, the noble
Baroness, Lady Neville-Rolfe, and the members of the Built
Environment Committee for their thorough, detailed and
evidence-based review of the current context of public transport
in our towns and cities. This review comes at a critical time for
public transport, as we consider considerable changes to travel
patterns as we emerge from the Covid pandemic. I also thank the
Institution of Civil Engineers, mentioned by the noble Earl,
, for its helpful briefing, and
our Library, which, as ever, provided a succinct and relevant
briefing.
I grew up in a planned new town with 45 kilometres of cycleway
infrastructure, which I know many towns would give their eye
teeth for, and the then council-owned SuperBus service, which
disappeared with privatisation. I consider it a very fortunate,
good model of transport. In considering this subject, we must
always be extremely careful not to underestimate the vital
importance of all aspects of public transport. A notable
statistic that stood out for me was the National Audit Office’s
conclusion that bus services alone affect the performance of
two-thirds of government departments. I would go so far as to say
that public transport is a key pillar of levelling up, sitting
alongside jobs and skills, housing, health, education, community
safety and climate change.
The noble Lord, , referred to the contribution
that good bus services have made in London to social mobility and
the economy. As he said, nearly two-thirds of all journeys on
public transport are by bus. Yet, as the Campaign for Better
Transport points out, bus miles have declined by 27% since the
pandemic, with over 5,000 routes lost. The Select Committee sets
out clearly in its report that when the pandemic support funding
ends—I appreciate that the cliff edge has been moved to June;
that was greatly appreciated—we could see even further reductions
of 20% in bus services. As the poorest 20% of households make
three times as many trips by bus as the richest 20%, this could
have a further devastating impact on levelling up. If you take a
job or college place based on being able to access it by bus, and
then that bus service is cut, your access to that opportunity is
severed. These points were referred to by the noble Lords, and , and the noble Baroness,
Lady Fox, gave another worrying example of their impact.
There can be no doubt that the hollowing out of local government
funding over successive years since 2010 has inflicted deep and
lasting damage on the provision of effective and efficient public
transport for our communities. With un-ringfenced budgets, the
pressures on adult care and children’s services are overwhelming
local authority budgets, resulting in cuts to areas such as
transport subsidies. As has been debated this afternoon, funding
for transport is at best contradictory and, at worst, chaotic and
wasteful.
My noble friend referred to issues around
“London versus the rest”. I also wanted to mention the importance
of differentiating between towns and cities in relation to public
transport, not to mention interconnectivity with rural areas.
Towns can feel like the Cinderella of public transport systems;
they miss out on competitive funding pots because their local
authorities do not have the resources to put bids together and,
in two-tier areas, they have to compete with surrounding
districts for funding. The prospect of London-style public
transport—even Manchester-style public transport would be quite
good—can seem like a distant dream in our towns, where services
are infrequent, unreliable and expensive, or in rural areas,
where they are non-existent. Even creative solutions such as
demand-responsive transport can flounder because of over-demand
and congestion.
It is clear from the report that changing public transport needs
post pandemic need radically new thinking and approaches. Our
services are geared to nine-to-five weekday commuting, when the
whole pattern of working and leisure travel has changed. In
truth, this was starting to happen before Covid, but it has
accelerated considerably. The Institution of Civil Engineers
points out the importance of data gathering and analysis post
Covid; these points are examined in detail in the report. I am
interested to hear the Minister’s response on how this is being
undertaken by the DfT and whether she yet has any sense of how
long it will be before a settled, post-pandemic picture of public
transport use emerges.
It is impossible to do justice to such a comprehensive report in
a few minutes, so I will focus on passenger experience, funding
and devolution. With the complex systems and structures around
public transport provision in the UK, it is all too easy for the
passenger experience to get lost. Although bus service
improvement plans are a step in the right direction, what
reassurance is there of robust bus user consultation processes?
The same applies to train and other public transport modes. Too
often, it seems to be left to passengers to form their own
pressure groups to drive the changes that they want to see.
In my local community people tell me that, although they would
like very frequent services, they would much rather have a sharp
focus on reliability and travel information that they can rely on
and—as the noble Lord, , referred to—affordable and
stable fares, transport systems that connect with each other and
with walking and cycling routes, and to feel safe. I have some
experience of this, having just finished the production of a bus
interchange that links in with cycling. The railway station has
covered waiting accommodation, Changing Places-type toilets and
other facilities linking with mobility scooters to get people
around once they get to the bus station. Can the Minister comment
on how close we are to an integrated transport strategy? Could
that help enable the data sharing needed to provide good
passenger travel information?
I was particularly pleased to see the issue of safety being taken
very seriously by the Select Committee, a point highlighted by
the noble Baroness, Lady Eaton. Changing work and leisure
patterns mean that public transport is often needed in the
evenings, and the combination of unreliable services, stations,
stops and interchanges that do not feel safe and the fact that
many local authorities have decided for budget reasons to turn
off street lights at night all mitigate against women and other
vulnerable users feeling safe to use public transport.
The ambition to bring local transport systems
“significantly closer to the standards of London”
is laudable if somewhat incomprehensible to those who live in
rural areas that may have scarce or non-existent public
transport. Nevertheless, let us be optimistic. If improvements
are to be made, it will require a herculean effort of
disentangling the complexities of funding and the disparities
mentioned by the noble Lord, .
The Select Committee is right to set out the key challenges. They
include evaluation of the investment in capital schemes, on which
the committee had some very interesting evidence from Professor
Preston, who discussed the issues of social cost benefits of
transport schemes relating to public health, environment, access
to jobs and skills, and quoted a KPMG study showing a 3:1 social
benefit over cost. There is the further cliff edge for support
for bus services funding, now extended to June 2023, but can the
Minister elaborate further on what will happen after that? Then
there is the competitive bidding process for funding, which
disadvantages those areas most in need of stable, sustainable
public transport.
There is also the failure to deliver less than half of the £3
billion that local authorities were expecting for bus service
improvement plans. I have seen the table setting out the combined
total, but that does not help the local authorities that wanted
to be ambitious with their improvement plans or those that got no
funding at all. Encouraging local authorities to bid for
levelling-up funds for public transport just exchanges one
competitive funding pot with another. Can the Minister comment on
how the DfT will respond to the Select Committee’s recommendation
that it should switch from funding pots—or bidding bingo, as I
prefer to call it—to provision in block grants, mentioned by the
noble Lord, , and others? I note that we
are told that we may see a paper on this later this year, but it
is pretty urgent that we get on with that.
On the point about concessionary fares, which was raised by noble
Lords this afternoon, I am afraid that I disagree with the noble
Lord, . The fantastic contribution
that concessionary fares make to well-being for those who benefit
is remarkable. I hope that the Minister will confirm that it is
not the intention of the Government to use this method to fill
the funding gap.
Lastly, on devolution—for which I am a passionate advocate, as
many noble Lords will know—the Levelling-up and Regeneration Bill
going through your Lordships’ House has the opportunity and the
potential to ensure that the Select Committee’s key
recommendation on effective integration of land use and transport
planning can be realised. In fact, we will be discussing some of
these issues tomorrow in Committee. As Manchester has been able
to go further with this than other local authorities, it was
interesting to read Andy Burnham’s evidence to the Select
Committee. In advocating franchising, he pointed out that his
case was strengthened
“because large subsidies are being paid at the moment to various
operators in the deregulated model”,
which, in his view,
“delivers very limited returns for the public”.
He also asked whether public operators would be allowed to take
part in the franchising schemes as well. I am interested in the
Minister’s view on that.
I look forward to the Minister’s responses to all the points made
this afternoon. It is absolutely right that we should link
transport planning with local plans. There are some difficulties
with that, particularly in two-tier areas, but we work together
and co-operate well on issues like that. We may need to
articulate that in debates on the Levelling Up and Regeneration
Bill. I am grateful to the noble Earl, , and the noble Lords, and , the noble Baroness, Lady
Eaton, and the noble Lords, and Lord Faulkner, for their very
strong advocacy of that system.
We cannot all live in Paris, which we heard about earlier,
although some of us might not be averse to that—I certainly would
not, but it is important that we have accessible, reliable and
safe transport networks, which are essential to help us to
achieve our long-term strategic objectives. Decarbonising the
economy is not the least of those, but there are also the
sustainable development goals. If the recommendations of this
report are implemented, they will take us some way towards that,
and I look forward to hearing the responses from the
Minister.
5.21pm
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department for
Transport () (Con)
My Lords, I am well aware that I shall get about halfway through
my speech and we shall then all be called to vote, but I shall
carry on none the less.
I am enormously grateful to all noble Lords who have taken part
in the debate today. There were so many insightful contributions,
some quite spirited, and not all noble Lords were in agreement on
some of the key matters of the day, which I shall come back to.
Of course, my noble friend opened the debate extremely
well, as he always does, and I am very grateful to my noble
friend Lady Neville-Rolfe for her role in chairing the committee.
I remember my day in front of the committee very well indeed; it
is always a pleasure to be grilled by people who share my
ambitions—and, indeed, the enthusiasm for all things
transport.
I start by noting and emphasising the clear alignment between
many of the committee’s recommendations and the Government’s own
ambitions for public transport in our towns and cities. To
demonstrate, for example, in the recent Spring Budget, the
Government announced a further round of city region sustainable
transport settlements, which is the worst named scheme ever—or
CRSTS. We have pledged another £8.8 billion over five years from
2027, which builds on the £5.7 billion provided in the first
round of settlements. Noble Lords may think that that is a very
large figure and that I am just banging it out, but why is it
important?
The settlement is so important for cities outside London, to give
them certainty so that they can plan for the future. That is
precisely what we have done by indicating the amount of funding
that will be available from 2027. If we are to meet our goal of
ensuring that places outside London have public transport that is
significantly closer to that which is in London, we need to make
these very substantial and long-term commitments to spending in
those areas. The committee called for block grants, and I shall
come back to that later—because, of course, one size definitely
does not fit all and never does with transport.
On buses, noble Lords will have noticed—and this was of great
interest to my noble friend Lord Moylan—that we have, in recent
weeks, taken a number of short, medium and long-term measures. We
have extended the bus recovery grant and the £2 fare cap scheme
until June 2023. I do not have any further information on that,
and I know that the noble Baroness, Lady Taylor, is very keen to
understand where we go next. Clearly, we are looking at this. The
noble Baroness also asked when we will know when patronage has
settled. I suspect that we never will. My experience in my four
years in the DfT, particularly in the past three years, is that
it is never homogeneous.
I am going to take a little break, and we shall go and vote. I
shall continue talking in due course.
5.25pm
Sitting suspended for a Division in the House.
5.35pm
(Con)
My Lords, I will try to recover where I was, but I cannot wholly
remember, so I will go back to the bit on buses because it is a
topic of great importance. I had mentioned the bus recovery grant
and the £2 fare cap, both of which have been extended. On lower
patronage and knowing where it will settle, I point out that it
will depend on the location and sometimes even be down to the
route. The other thing to recall is that some of the elements of
the national bus strategy and the bus service improvement plans
are about growing patronage from wherever we are now. Therefore,
I very much expect things not to be static and for changes to
come for quite some time yet.
The DfT also announced further funding for the ZEBRA programme in
Yorkshire, Norfolk, Leicester, Portsmouth and Hampshire, and the
establishment of the new virtual bus centre of excellence to
boost skills and good practice in the sector. That is key for
local transport authorities, because they have a problem when it
comes to capability and capacity. That is a topic that I will
come back to in due course.
These measures show that the Government are committed both to
maintaining a good standard of bus services—as the Built
Environment Committee suggested that we do—and to building on
these standards through the delivery of the national bus
strategy. For those most ambitious local transport authorities
that will lead, through the bus service improvement plans, to
increasing patronage.
Noble Lords identify that frequency is really important. That is
what we are trying to get to with the BSIPs, particularly in
bigger cities, putting the user first and increasing frequencies
to provide the sort of services needed. Then, in more rural
areas, there are interventions such as demand-responsive
transport—and indeed reliable services. A number of noble Lords
pointed out that reliability is what the user really needs.
The DfT has also published its transport data strategy, which is
hugely important. We have to encourage people to use the data
provided by the DfT via the operators, so that they can collate
that into apps, and the users then get a better experience
because they know when buses will arrive and how frequent they
are. My noble friend Lady Eaton highlighted how important it is
to have that information to hand. Those of us who live in London
take it utterly for granted, and we must make sure that it is
rolled out as far as possible.
This is not an exhaustive list of how the Government are aligned
with the Built Environment Committee. Our announcements include
£1 billion-worth of funding in the third round of the
levelling-up fund as well as additional funding for highways
maintenance, and indeed many more. The Government are not sitting
still. We absolutely recognise the points made in the report; as
I note, we did not agree with all of them, but we agreed with the
vast majority.
The next subject I want to peruse is devolution, local
leadership, capability, capacity and all the things that go with
that. I have found the debate today a little confusing and hard
to rationalise in parts. I hear some noble Lords wanting an
integrated national strategy for the whole of transport, but that
sounds very communist to me, and I am not entirely sure how one
would achieve it. Other noble Lords are very much focusing on
local needs for local people and local accountability, then
others say things like, “It’s dreadful that central government
demands so many things from local authorities”, when I am not
entirely sure that the Government do. I am not sure we have the
levers to do that, particularly in transport, because transport
is, and has been for quite a long time, highly devolved to local
transport authorities. Issues such as local transport planning
rest with local authorities; they simply cannot be done from
Whitehall, nor should they. This is very much by design. We rely
on local and regional organisations to work together to identify
and utilise opportunities for network improvements. The noble
Baroness, Lady Vere, sitting at her desk in Horseferry Road,
cannot do that: it is just impossible. We have to create the
right framework and provide the right guidance and funding to
local authorities, and then they need to run with it. That is
what is so important.
The levelling-up White Paper committed to extending, deepening
and simplifying local devolution in England
“so that by 2030, every part of England that wants one will have
a devolution deal”
because we have seen the enormous success of devolution deals to
date in the world of transport. Noble Lords will have heard me
refer to the CRSTS. That is billions and billions of pounds that
we give to those areas with devolution deals. It is long-term
funding—it allows them to plan, and they have the capacity and
capability to do so. This is the goal; this is where we want to
be, but we cannot be there at this moment.
I look at the years when I have been in the department. Sometimes
when you get bids for funding, frankly, they are not very good,
and I cannot in good conscience turn around and allocate
taxpayers’ funding to bids that are not very good. They simply
would not fly. That is why we need both processes. Highly skilled
larger areas with devolution deals can get their long-term
settlements but, until we have greater local responsibility and
accountability via devolution deals, we will have to have a
bidding process. I am okay with that balance. However, there will
also be smaller local transport authorities which, if you gave
them a block grant, would not have a hope of ever being able to
build anything significant. It is unfair to keep those people out
in the cold, because the benefits of transport often go to users
who are not in your area at all. That is the whole point of
transport: it gets you from A to B.
Allied to that, we come to the topic of planning integration and
connectivity, which is really important. Transport integration is
the holy grail, we need to make sure we get it done as well as
possible. That is why having devolution deals for transport is
very beneficial: because authorities can plan on a holistic basis
over a significant area.
What do we want to do with the buses? There are the bus service
improvement plans, but it is really important that they are used
to update their local transport plans. I think it was my noble
friend Lady Eaton who noted that 61% have not been updated since
2011. If I was the leader of a local council, I would feel a
little worried about that, to put it mildly—but this is what
local accountability and responsibility is all about. We must
provide guidance to local transport authorities, and that is
exactly what we will do. We will consult on guidance on the local
transport plans fairly soon, we hope, but it is only guidance.
Local transport authorities then have the responsibility, as the
representatives in their local area, to build them into local
transport plans. That is absolutely key.
Of course those local transport plans should align with an area’s
broader local development plans—that is important—but it is a
complex picture and the timelines may be misaligned sometimes. To
set out some sort of Whitehall-dictated “thou shalt do this on
this date between this plan and this plan” is not going to work.
We have to give the responsibility and the accountability to
local areas to decide for themselves what works and what does
not. Quite frankly, if it does not work and they do not get the
best for their local community, voters can vote them out at the
next local election.
I am well aware that there will be further discussion around
local transport plans and local plans and how they are going to
work together via the infrastructure delivery strategy in the
Levelling-up and Regeneration Bill currently passing through your
Lordships’ House. I would welcome further discussion—I find it
very interesting—but I do not see it as a solution that, at the
moment, looks likely to achieve the best outcomes for local
people.
Moving on to the other rather vexed and difficult question, I
think it is worth reflecting on car usage. I will repeat what I
said when I gave evidence to the committee, which is that the
Government do not have targets on car usage; we have targets on
other things to make public transport, cycling and walking the
first choice for travel, but we are not making anyone do that. We
believe that it would be the best option for many urban areas, as
was published in Gear Change. We have had a very open and honest
conversation about what we want to see, particularly in our more
built-up areas, in terms of cycling and walking. Furthermore, we
made changes to the Highway Code to make sure that those who
could cause the most harm bear the greatest responsibility. We
want to improve our streets, particularly in urban areas where
there can be tensions. I do not want those tensions to exist, but
I cannot mandate them not to. We have to create the environment
for that.
Road space allocation also causes quite a lot of difference of
opinion. I say once again that no one size fits all for road
space allocation. The Government can revise guidance for local
transport plans and refresh the Manual for Streets, which is what
we are doing. With those two documents, we have to leave it to
local transport authorities, listening to their local
communities, to decide what they want to do. We are not going to
make them put in any cycle lanes or bus lanes. It is up to them.
We think they should, and if they do not then other things might
happen in terms of funding streams. At the moment, they simply
would not get any funding for bus lanes—but if they do not want
any, why should they? This is important. Road space allocation
goes back to local responsibility and accountability, although I
accept that there are tensions and it is difficult. Every single
street in every single place in this country will need a
different approach, and that is why local people doing it is so
important.
I am conscious that I am desperately running out of time, but I
want to comment on something very close to my heart and those of
many noble Lords. My noble friends and Lady Eaton highlighted
transport safety. That is key to attracting people back. Bus
service improvement plans should include how local transport
authorities and operators will ensure not only that services are
safe but that they feel safe. We are also taking forward 13
recommendations by the independent Transport Champions for
Tackling Violence against Women and Girls on street safety, doing
research on safety and the accessibility of bus stations and
stops. I have many more things that I will endeavour to put in a
letter. I really do welcome the work of the committee and hope
that it continues to delve into these matters around transport.
They are not easy, but ensuring accountability and responsibility
locally is the best way forward.
5.49pm
(Con)
My Lords, I see that, as rumours of the exciting quality of this
debate have spread through the Palace of Westminster, the Moses
Room has filled up with an audience keen to listen. None the
less, I shall endeavour to be brief in summing up. I thank
everybody who has taken part in the debate. I also thank the
noble Lord, , for reminding me that in my
opening remarks I should have thanked the people who gave
evidence to our committee in the course of our inquiry. I am
pleased to do that.
I will briefly run through some of the key points made. My noble
friend Lady Eaton put great importance on what is referred to as
“the first and last mile” in transport: the getting to the hub
that allows you to take part in the transport system, which we
could have said more about.
The noble Lord, , referred to Paris and the
possibility of getting road users to be more courteous to each
other. We know how to do that; we have just abandoned it in this
country. We know how to do it because we learned lessons and
started to apply them from the Netherlands in relation to shared
space, but then we opted for a scheme of not sharing space but
segregating it. If you start to segregate and allocate, top down,
a limited resource, which is what road space is, inevitably you
get people quarrelling about how much they have had allocated to
them and about how others are interfering with their rights to
their space, and so forth.
In this context, my noble friend of Fulham and the noble
Baroness, Lady Fox of Buckley, both referred to the importance of
bus reliability and the fact that cycle lanes can impinge on
that. Equally, you could say that bus lanes could impinge on the
space that might be allocated to people using bicycles. But none
of this is taken into account by the Government because, of
course, it is all meant to be a matter of local choice.
A large number of participants in the debate—the noble Lords,
and , and my noble friend Lord
Haselhurst—talked about the importance of joining up the planning
and transport policies. I do not see why this is such a
difficulty for the Minister. She has told us how much money—a
very large amount—the Government intend to allocate to local
transport schemes over the next few years. Is it too much to
say—other government departments do not find it too much to
say—“If you are going to have this money, you need an up-to-date
local transport plan”? It might be one that shows the department
that it is coherent with local planning policies too, in
particular for new development.
I have the highest admiration for the noble Lord, , but my one
quibble with his contribution is that he quoted a consultancy
company that was critical of national and local governments for
their reluctance to impose policies limiting private car use. I
do not know where this consultancy has been, but it has obviously
not been anywhere near a low-traffic neighbourhood that has been
sprung on us recently, one of the many road-closure schemes that
have been going on or indeed things such as the ULEZ. These
policies are absolutely everywhere at the moment. However, the
noble Lord valuably illustrated from his own knowledge and
experience—coming back to my earlier point—how development and
transport working together, a classic case of joining up
policies, can produce the right results if it is done in a
coherent way.
I shall not go much further. My noble friend mentioned very light rail,
and the noble Lord, , rightly pointed out
disparities in funding between different regions. I am grateful
to the noble Baroness, Lady Taylor of Stevenage, for endorsing
most if not all of the things said in the debate by those who
participated in putting forward the report.
The Minister has put a great deal of preparation into this. She
is highly committed to transport and public transport, and we are
all grateful to her for listening to us today and for responding
on behalf of the Government. I am relieved to be able to tell her
that I do not think anybody in the debate actually suggested that
she run all the local transport systems in the country from her
desk in Whitehall, but even so, none of that—with her very
correct emphasis on local choice by locally elected
authorities—would stop her insisting that transport plans are up
to date as a condition of funding. It would not stop her
considering whether her active travel plans—which she says in
that minatory tone are entirely a matter for local choice but
obviously they will not get any money they do not adopt them and
that other consequences might flow from them—are actually
impinging on the reliability of buses, which she thinks is very
important.
I think that we could do more and that the report remains still
to be properly digested by the Government. We did not have time
to discuss post-project evaluation, but many of the
recommendations made in the report still have not been fully
taken on board by the Government, though I think they would be
very helpful. With that, I thank everybody and I commend the
report to the committee.
Motion agreed.
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